Borland v. Phillips

3 Ala. 718
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Ala. 718 (Borland v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borland v. Phillips, 3 Ala. 718 (Ala. 1842).

Opinion

ORMOND, J.

This bill was filed by the complainant, in the year 1826, to subject the lands of Joseph Philips, deceased, in the hands of his heirs and devisees, to the payment of a debt due from him to the complainant, upon the ground, that by his will, the deceased had charged his lands with the payment of his debts.

In the year 1833, a final decree was made in favor of the com[720]*720plainant, from which the defendants appealed to this Court, by which the decree was reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. See the case reported, 3 Porter, 9, by the name of Darrington v. Borland.

By the decision then made, several questions of law presented on the record were settled, and must be considered the law of this case, as has been repeatedly held' in this Court.

The debt alleged to be due the complainant, as stated in the bill, arose out of a transaction in the State of Georgia, in the year 1818.

It is alleged, that the deceased, “on the 4th Nov. 1818, for a valuable consideration, made and delivered to your orator, his certain promissory note, for the sum of five thousand dollars, which note was also signed by one Ezekiel E. Parks, and made payable to your orator, sixty-one days after date, at the branch bank in Milledgeville. Your orator further charges, that the said note was negotiated and discounted in said bank, and the money obtained by the said Joseph Philips; and your orator was afterwards compelled to purchase up from the bank, said note of five thousand dollars, with the interest which had accrued thereon, and to pay said bank therefor.”

It is further alleged, that in 1822, the complainant commenced suit on the note in the Circuit Court of Monroe county, against Zeno Philips, executor of Joseph Philips, and at the March term, 1825, recovered a judgment for seven thousand four hundred and eighty-three dollars and thirty-three cents, besides costs, to be levied of the goods and chattels of the deceased, in his hands to be administered, and that the execution which issued was returned, no “ property found.”

This Court, after a most elaborate examination, among other things, held, that as there was no privity between the executor ■ and the heirs, or devisees of the testator, a judgment against the former was no evidence in a proceeding against the latter, to subject real estate derived from the testator, to the payment of his debts, further than to repel a defence under the statute of non claim, but the original justice and continuing obligation of the debt alleged to be due from the testator, must be established.

The cause having been remanded, a reference was again made to the master to ascertain the debt due by the deceased [721]*721to the complainant, who reported a debt to be due, of upwards of sixteen thousand dollars. The report, and the evidence upon which it is founded, was excepted to, and appears in the record. So far as it relates to the debt, it consists of the testimony of Enoch Parsons and A. B. Cooper, Esquires.

The former testified, that at the March term, 1825, of Monroe Circuit Court, the complainant recovered a judgment against Zeno Philips, executor of Joseph Philips, for the amount stated in the bill, which judgment was founded on a promissory note, signed by said Joseph Philips; that he had seen him write, and believed it to be the note of Joseph Philips. That in 1833, the court-house of Monroe county, in which was kept the offices of the clerks of the Circuit and County Courts, was burnt, and all the interlocutory orders and decrees made in this cause, destroyed.

Mr Cooper proved the burning of the court-house of Monroe county, and the destruction of the records, except the papers of this cause; that he once saw the entry of a judgment against the executor of Philips, that an execution issued thereon, was returned no property found. He also proved the genuineness-of the first report made by the master, Samuel McColl, previous to the reversal in this Court.

This evidence, both Chancellors Bowie and Crenshaw, who at different times passed on the report of the master, considered insufficient to establish the debt, charged in the bill to be due from the deceased to the complainant, and of that opinion is this Court.

The report of the master, made previous to the reversal of the cause, cannot be looked to for any purpose. The first decree was reversed in part, on the ground that the master was incompetent to act in that capacity, being also guardian ad li-tem to the minors. The judgment against the executor, admitting that it is satisfactorily proved, being no evidence against the defendants in this suit; the only remaining testimony is, the brief statement of Mr Parsons, that the judgment was founded on a note which, from having seen the deceased write, he believed to have been executed by him.

The first objection to this testimony is, that the note itself is not produced, or its absence accounted for. It has been urged, we must presume that it was destroyed with the records in the [722]*722clerk’s office, but it is not shown that it was filed with the record, or any fact proved to raise that presumption. It is true, that it is frequently done, but it is not necessary that it should be so filed, and therefore no presumption can arise, that it was destroyed at the burning of the court-house, merely from the destruction of the record of the cause. Again, the note described by Parsons, does not correspond with the note described in the bill; that was a note made by the deeeased and one Parks, and the note described by Parsons, is the individual note of the deceased. Its date, when payable, to whom payable, for what amount, and all other distinguishing characteristics are omitted, nor does the witness pretend that he has any knowledge on these points, further than that the judgment which he has described, was founded on a note. But as the judgment itself was not evidence, it could only have been referred to for the purpose of refreshing the memory of the witness, and is not in itself, evidence for any purpose. Yet, if we strike from the testimony of the witness, all that relates- to the judgment, there will be nothing left, but that he once saw a note made by the deceased to the complainant, its date, to whom, and. when payable, and for what amount, are all left in a state of uncertainty. It is too clear for argument, that such a statement would not prove the allegations of the bill.

There is, however, if possible, a more formidable objection than this, to the testimony.

The charge in the bill relating to the indebtedness of the de-eeased, seems to have been designedly involved in obscurity.— Thus it is first stated, that the note for five thousand dollars was executed by the deceased, and one Parks, for a valuable consideration, to the complainant, payable sixty-one days after date, at the branch bank at Milledgeville. It is then alleged, that this note was negotiated at, and discounted by the bank at Milledgeville, and the money received by the deceased. It is not stated that the deceased did not pay the bank at the maturity of the note, but the allegation is, “ that your orator was af-terwards compelled to purchase up from the bank, said note of five thousand dollars, with the interest which accrued thereon, and to pay the bank therefor.”

It is not easy to conceive how any one could be compelled to purchase the note from the bank, nor indeed does it appear [723]

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ala. 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borland-v-phillips-ala-1842.